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  1. Mary Ann Angell Young (June 8, 1803 – June 27, 1882) was the second woman married to Brigham Young, who served as president of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). Young's first wife had died in 1832, leaving Young a widower.

    • Brigham Young
  2. Apr 27, 2019 · Getting to Know: Mary Ann Angell. Mary Ann Angell was born June 8, 1803 to James and Phoebe Morton Angell in Ontario County, New York. When she was young, her family moved to Providence, Rhode Island. There they lived until her mother, Phoebe, left her abusive husband and moved herself and their two children to China, New York in 1831.

    • PO Box 342 Draper, UT 84020 USA
  3. Image. woman holding old Bible. Fortunate to grow up in a home that prioritized scripture reading, Mary Ann Angell (1803–82) gained a fondness for reading the Bible, especially the teachings of the Savior, at an early age. 1 She developed a firm foundation in religious principles through her scripture study and teachings from her mother ...

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  5. Sep 15, 2023 · Mary Ann Angell Young was the second wife of Brigham Young. They were married in 1834. President Young's first wife, Miriam Angeline Works, had died in 1832. Mary Ann was born on June 8, 1803, to James and Phoebe Morton Angell in Ontario County, New York.

  6. Mary Ann Angell met Brigham Young in Kirtland in 1833. Baptized in 1832, Mary Ann was an early convert to the Book of Mormon. She testified that “the Spirit bore witness to her … of the truth of its origin, so strongly that she could never afterwards doubt it.” 1 She soon set out for Kirtland, arriving in the spring of 1833. 2

  7. Mary Ann Angell (1808–1882) was born in Seneca, New York, the daughter of James William and Phoebe Ann Morton Angell. At the time of Brigham’s mission to Great Britain, Mary Ann was his only wife. His first wife, Miriam Works, died in 1832, leaving him a widower with two children.

  8. The woman was Mary Ann Angell Young, the wife of Brigham Young, one of the Church’s governing Twelve Apostles. Brigham had left the family two months earlier, making his way to England, where he and other Apostles were preaching the gospel to gain converts to the Church.

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